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Mandatory Quotas In Team Selection.
The outstanding win by England in the first cricket test has given
the South African selectors lots of headaches re their team for the
Cape Town test in a few days time.
That they would 'persuade' their world class batsman AB de Villiers
to take on the wicket keeping duties too in the interest of maintaining
the quota of 4 'Players of colour' was crazy. The player he made room
for was clearly not up to test match standard & SA risk losing AB
altogether as his work load is just too great.
The injury to Dale Steyn could allow the Proteas to bring in Rabada
thus maintaining the '4 policy' but what a system that is not based
solely on ability!
the South African selectors lots of headaches re their team for the
Cape Town test in a few days time.
That they would 'persuade' their world class batsman AB de Villiers
to take on the wicket keeping duties too in the interest of maintaining
the quota of 4 'Players of colour' was crazy. The player he made room
for was clearly not up to test match standard & SA risk losing AB
altogether as his work load is just too great.
The injury to Dale Steyn could allow the Proteas to bring in Rabada
thus maintaining the '4 policy' but what a system that is not based
solely on ability!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Mampara. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well I'm sorry you didn't appreciate the attempt at humour -- not everything I try is going to be funny I guess. I've never been particularly bothered as it happens where a particular person was born -- if they've chosen to represent England that's good enough for me.
Mampara, I have to confess that until maybe yesterday I wasn't even aware that South Africa operated a quota-based selection policy.
Mampara, I have to confess that until maybe yesterday I wasn't even aware that South Africa operated a quota-based selection policy.
Oops that didn't work try again
http:// bleache rreport .com/ar ticles/ 1773400 -how-ma ny-engl and-tes t-crick eters-h ave-bee n-born- abroad
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Presumably the quote is in response to apartheid, when all "players of colour" would have been excluded (including one or two who didn't even play for South Africa, eg D'Oliveira)? I suppose positive discrimination in response to that, in the short-term, can help serve to heal wounds, bridge divides, etc etc. In the long-term it's totally wrong. Only South Africans would be able to say if things have moved on far enough for this policy to hinder more than it helps.
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